The FATHOM team is made up of experts with a diverse background and we serve a variety of industries from automotive to aerospace to medical to consumer electronics—we try to blog often, so check back for the latest in advanced prototyping and manufacturing!

FEATURED BLOG POSTS

FATHOM was issued a US Patent for the systems and methods powering its online digital manufacturing platform, and also received its 7th consecutive ranking on Inc. 5000’s list of fastest-growing private companies in America—only 1.5% of businesses have made the list seven times.

Highlighting a collaborative project for the United States Marine Corps, a modular vehicle for logistical missions. In partnership with Launch Forth, Deloitte, and Siemens, FATHOM took on the challenge of fabricating a crowd-sourced vehicle concept within an accelerated timeline.

The FATHOM team recently worked with Design World Editor Leslie Langnau to explore the opportunity with direct digital manufacturing. In this published article, learn more about new realities in manufacturing.

Today's product development-focused teams have the ability to focus on how a product should function rather than how it’s made, an approach that drives greater innovation and pushes the limits of manufacturing.

In a joint release earlier this month, Stratasys and leading aircraft manufacturer Airbus announced that their partnership would include the standardization of ULTEM™ 9085 3D printing material for the production of flight parts for the Airbus A350 XWB aircraft.

When 3D printing with FDM, designers and engineers can choose between using a solid fill pattern or a sparse fill pattern. Solid fill designs result in parts more traditionally associated with 3D printing, block-like structures with consistent density throughout.

FATHOM and GrabCAD are proud to announce Casey Rogers, leader of a student run makerspace out of UC Berkeley’s Bechtel Engineering Center, as the Grand Prize Champion of the 2015 Make the Unmakeable Challenge!

FATHOM partnered with GrabCAD and SolidProfessor in hosting three open design competitions comprising 2015 Make The Unmakeable Challenge. Each round of the challenge dared designers and engineers to innovatively utilize the unique design freedom of additive manufacturing in creating inventive products related to a specific theme.